Australia has given approval for the sale of the country's largest private landholding, the Kidman estate.

It will go to Australia's richest woman, Gina Rinehart, and her business partner, Chinese developer Shanghai CRED.

The largest Kidman station, Anna Creek, will be sold to a local farming family.

The sale of the estate, encompassing about 1.3% of Australian land, had been halted several times due to concerns about foreign interests.

Kidman estate said in a statement that "all Australian regulatory approvals for the sale have now been met, 99% of Kidman shareholders have accepted the offer, and the announcement means the sale can now progress to its conclusion".

Ms Rinehart's company Hancock Prospecting and Shanghai CRED submitted their bid of A$386.5m (£228.9; $288.2m) in October under an entity called Outback Beef. The proposal was for Hancock Prospecting to hold 67%, with the rest held by Shanghai CRED. It aimed to overcome government concerns about foreign investment.

Previous Chinese-led bids were blocked by the government, which cited national security concerns. The Kidman estate was originally offered for sale in April 2015.

Kidman & Co

Founded in 1899

101,411

sq/km of overall territory

77,300 sq/km to be sold

1% of Australia to change hands

15,000 tonnes of beef carcass shipped globally per year

The Anna Creek cattle station - the largest one in the Kidman group - is not part of the Rinehart deal. That farm, together with its outstation The Peake, will be acquired by the Williams family who own properties that adjoin Anna Creek.

With the sale of Anna Creek and The Peake, Kidman's Australian ownership increases from 66.1% to 74.7%.

Australian Treasurer Scott Morrison said: "Previous security concerns that influenced my earlier rejections of sale proposals have been mitigated by excision of Anna Creek, the largest single property holding in Australia part of which is located in the Woomera Prohibited Area (WPA) in South Australia, from the proposed sale to Outback Beef.

"Australia welcomes foreign investment where it is consistent with our national interests."

Some of the farms are close to a government weapons-testing range at Woomera, sparking concerns about Kidman falling into foreign hands.